Indiana Pacers deal #57 pick to the New York Knicks for cash, and Larry Bird wants changes

by Kent SterlingJune 27, 2014

by Kent Sterling

While the Pacers played softball for the Indiana Children’s Wish Fund, their boss dealt pick 57 for cash.

For over four hours, seven of us sat in the Indiana Pacers media room waiting for team president Larry Bird to pull the trigger on a move to bolster their roster. TV crews were absent. Radio hosts, minus me, nowhere to be found. Lots of pizza, few mouths.

The writing was on the wall that the Pacers would not upset the 56-win, back-to-back Central Division Champion, almost everyone under contract Indiana Pacers apple cart. Bird seemed likely to pass on the chance to turn back any of his cards for fresh ones.

But no one thought they would come away completely empty after a long night of watching other teams restock their shelves. The Pacers entered the night with the 57th pick, and at the very least, they would at least grab the rights to some heavily consonanted Euro. That wouldn’t be thrilling news, but it wouldn’t be nothing.

In the end, it was nothing as the Pacers swapped their lone pick for cash. The Knicks evidently had their eyes on Frenchman Louis Labeyrie, and the Pacers didn’t, so owner Herb Simon gets some walking around money instead of the rights to a guy whose name sounds more like a character on “Hogan’s Heroes” than the future piece to an NBA champion.

Bird said after the draft that the Pacers had their eyes on a guy who went a “couple of picks” before, but when he was gone, they decided nobody would be as good as the remaining somebodies. A couple of minutes later, Bird amended his remark to “a few picks earlier,” which I took as an admission that he was too specific about which guy they really liked.

The pick two picks earlier – Semaj Christon. I’ve wanted to ask Semaj for a long time why his parents named him “James” spelled backwards, so that’s disappointing.

Bird was also very direct in his criticism of the manner in which Pacers assets were deployed last season. He expressed love for his players many times in his 10 minute Q&A with the surviving media, but there was no such declaration of affection for Frank Vogel, who was never mentioned by name, but was evoked several times as Bird decried hot players being replaced, a lack of accountability, and the sparse deployment of Lavoy Allen.

Allen was the forgotten man on the Pacers roster following the trade that brought him over with Evan Turner from the Sixers for former all-star Danny Granger. Bird mentioned him twice by name as a guy the Pacers would target to re-sign.

Conrad Bruner found that odd, and asked the question that was rattling around my head too. “What the is your point in discussing a guy as a free agent target who never played an important minute as a throw-in who was used to even up the salaries so the Pacers could get Evan Turner?” Conrad is too polite to ask it like that, but the point that was confirmed by Bird was that he believes Allen should have played a significant role, but didn’t.

Throughout the small gathering, Bird was disappointed but good humored, until he began to talk about asserting accountability, letting hot players roll, and finding meaningful minutes for Lavoy Allen. During those moments, Bird bristled a bit and looked like a man who is still smarting over the Game Six elimination his team suffered at the hands of the flawed Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference Finals.

These are all inferences I’m making about Bird’s dissatisfaction with Vogel, but if I were Vogel I would pay close attention to following the not so veiled advice of his boss because he sure as hell seemed committed to holding Vogel accountable if the rotation is not relaxed, if players are not penalized for bad acts, and if Allen is a relentless DNP-CD.

Bird is committed to what he knows to be the best route to sustained success, and if Vogel doesn’t follow that path to the letter, someone else might.

2 thoughts on “Indiana Pacers deal #57 pick to the New York Knicks for cash, and Larry Bird wants changes”

I’m not sure what Vogel’s supposed to do with this group. Bird offered max money to Hibbert. He’s going to be the one who overpays for Lance. I don’t know that Danny Granger was the difference, but anyone who watches NBA basketball knew that Evan Turner wasn’t the cure for what ails Indiana. He needs the ball in his hands just like Paul and Lance. Turner’s a volume scorer and poor defender.

I like Bird, but I think Vogel’s done a decent job with a roster that hasn’t afforded him a lot of reliable depth the past two seasons. Sure, I’d like to have seen Copeland play more. I guess I’m just not sure how much water was in the rag to begin with. You can only wring so much out.

I will say Vogel and his staff don’t appear to develop talent extremely well. San Antonio hated to see George Hill go, many Pacers fans (excluding me) would like to see him go. I think teams like San Antonio take average talent and turn them into good and serviceable NBA players. That’s not what’s going on here. And it’s apparent that there’s a disconnect between the front office and coaching staff. That doesn’t fly in 2014. It’s never really flown, but with the new CBA, you really have to make a plan and stick with it.

I’m just concerned because the Jim O’Brien era was a disaster. That was Larry’s guy. Vogel was reluctantly chosen. But the Pacers don’t need Vogel’s replacement to be one Larry’s buddies. They need someone competent to coach and bring staff in to develop players.

Greg, I agree with most of what you have said. I think Vogel over-achieved for the players he had and also given the chemistry issues. For Bird not to acknowledge that is sad. And for Larry to complain to the press about Lavoy Allen not playing is ridiculous after the Turner and Bynum fiascos. His two jobs are to sign Lance and to address the point guard situation. Frank is an up and coming coach. Does he develop talent and get everything right – not yet. But I bet Greg Popovich didn’t in his 3rd year either or did any other Hall of Fame coach. Larry, bring in the players and leave Frank alone to coach and determine playing time.